Appropriately, Sanders caught heat for this response. Some replies were on target. Yet other people, who’d like to support a Democrat, assumed Sanders was claiming that all victims of police shootings are rude to officers.

Yet, most devastating for individuals on the law and order side, his reply ignores the criminal transgressions that suspects are immersed in when police engage in lethal force.

Furthermore, others believe statements made by the Democratic candidate have merit. They believe Sanders gave the student sound advice by removing fault in case of a tragic encounter with police. However, they fail to recognize the “polite” portion of his response is appropriate, but saying they will get “shot in the back of the head” infers that law enforcement officers are out to execute them. These words are inflammatory, pandering, and not helpful.

I’m not a Bernie supporter but his response was correct. Black folks are talking to their children especially their sons about what to do during a police stop. I’m glad he didn’t sugarcoat his words.

Yeah I don't have a problem with Bernie's answer it's not a great answer but even I as a black man don't have a sufficient answer for this question because it's not really about what I should do it's more so about what cops shouldn't do ??‍♂️

“A new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences demolishes the Democratic narrative regarding race and police shootings, which holds that white officers are engaged in an epidemic of racially biased shootings of black men. It turns out that white officers are no more likely than black or Hispanic officers to shoot black civilians. It is a racial group’s rate of violent crime that determines police shootings, not the race of the officer. The more frequently officers encounter violent suspects from any given racial group, the greater the chance that members of that racial group will be shot by a police officer. In fact, if there is a bias in police shootings after crime rates are taken into account, it is against white civilians, the study found.”

MacDonald continues:

“The ‘policing is racist’ discourse is poisonous. It exacerbates anti-cop tensions in minority communities and makes cops unwilling to engage in the proactive policing that can save lives. Last month, viral videos of pedestrians in Harlem, the Bronx, and Brooklyn assaulting passive New York Police Department officers showed that hostility toward the police in inner-city neighborhoods remains at dangerous levels.

“The anti-cop narrative deflects attention away from solving the real criminal-justice problem, which is high rates of black-on-black victimization. Blacks die of homicide at eight times the rate of non-Hispanic whites, overwhelmingly killed not by cops, not by whites, but by other blacks. The Democratic candidates should get their facts straight and address that issue. Until they do, their talk of racial justice will ring hollow.”

So the smoke and mirrors-racism created by Sanders and many other Democratic presidential candidates needs to be called out for what it is. IT IS A LIE. MacDonald referred to it as “poisonous,” and I couldn’t agree more. The public threat is coming from criminals who are granted more leniency around every corner, while police officers are targeted as being the instigators of hateful, racist dissension. THIS SIMPLY IS NOT TRUE!

Jim McNeff is the managing editor of Law Officer and founder of Badge 145, a ministry geared toward helping police officers and their families. Jim worked in military and civilian law enforcement for thirty-one years. While in the USAF he flew as a crewmember aboard the National Emergency Airborne Command Post—a presidential support detail. Following his military service, he served for twenty-eight years with the Fountain Valley Police Department in Orange County, California where he retired as a lieutenant. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in criminal justice from Southwest University and graduated from the prestigious Sherman Block Supervisory Leadership Institute as well as the IACP course, Leadership in Police Organizations.Jim has authored three books: The Spirit behind Badge 145, Justice Revealed, and Jurisdiction.